Explores the necessity for rebalancing chi respiration
Date: 12/28/2012 4:58:23 AM ( 12 y ago)
When there is insufficient thiamine to satisfy both the requirements of the bloodstream and the energy field chi lines, you are in a state of "chi depletion". In common terms, a "rundown" feeling, which makes you more vulnerable to fatigue and disease because your body cannot muster the energy to cope with daily stresses.
Sporadic intervals of cosmic chi pressure are persistently trying to wind you back up like a spring but the thiamine intake may not be sufficient or it may be intercepted by the voracious appetite of your "commensal" fungal load or diverted into dealing with chronic yeast-released acetaldehyde toxicity. Astrophysiology and yeast are intertwined and have been for as long as this fungus has coexisted with its chosen hosts.
Cosmic chi pressure switches on and off like an intermittent battery recharger but if you aren't aware of this cycle, then you may be tossed about like chaff in the wind. The lunar cycle creates a monthly "full moon effect" three-day push of thiamine back into chi lines. For individuals with low chi levels, this can be an arduous experience, with fatigue and insomnia, the telling symptoms that surface.
Slow-moving bodies such as Saturn and Uranus, in an on-going geocentric alignment pattern, can create continuous cosmic chi pressure for years at a time! The low blood thiamine levels that result during these times bring on a state of quasi-hibernation in the body with reduced energy levels impairing immune system function. Global pandemics are much more likely to take hold and spread during these times. Both major influenza pandemics, the Spanish flu of 1918 and the H1N1 outbreak of 2009, had the earth situated between Saturn and Uranus.
Since the double-ring structure of the thiamine molecule actually physically vibrates when it is in the chi lines, as tiny transducers of the body's energy field, vibrational medicine techniques can be used to coax it back and forth in a yin and yang dance capable of promoting healing and restoring a healthy balance.
High chi pressure days may trigger a plethora of symptoms (aggravation of chronic conditions or increased susceptibility to infection) in individuals with low chi reserves of thiamine and in those whose thiamine metabolism is supporting other demanding activity, e.g. pregnancy. When on-board thiamine reserves are insufficient to supply the demands of both the mother and the fetus, morning sickness (actually all-day sickness) may be the result, especially when cosmic chi pressure is attempting to force thiamine out of the bloodstream and back into the chi energy field lines. Individuals with additional nutritional imbalances that lead to hyperemesis gravidarum may find that the continuous chi pressure days are particularly troublesome, perhaps even to the extent of requiring hospitalization.
There are many techniques for smoothing out the effects of the chi roller coaster so that both phases (yin and yang) are accommodated. The intent of rebalancing the yin-yang cycle in the form of "artificial chi respiration" [1], is to provide for both aspects of the cycle without allowing the cosmic background to exert so much chi pressure that your body cannot cope with the extended yin phases that may be in effect.
Society has already been doing this for ages without realizing just what was involved. A skull cap, wool hood, magnetic bracelet, quartz crystal, chanting, massage, acupuncture, white noise, visualization, etc. can alter the cosmic chi pressure effect on the body's field in such a way that an artificial yang (stronger) cycle of chi respiration is initiated. The bracelet, quartz crystal, and pink noise can also be used to induce an artificial yin (weaker) cycle of chi respiration.
Due caution must be exercised when using polarized techniques to ensure that you have induced the chi respiration phase that you intended at any particular time. For example, a magnetic bracelet on the left wrist with magnets down will create a yang phase, with the magnets up, a yin phase. On the right wrist, the results are reversed (magnets down, a yin phase; magnets up, a yang phase). In the left hand a quartz crystal with the point away from the fingers will create a yang phase, and with the point towards the fingers, a yin phase. In the right hand, the results are reversed. White noise will induce a yang phase, pink noise, a yin. If in doubt, the kinesiology hand grip can be used to verify whether the technique being used is generating a yang (thiamine release -> stronger) or yin (thiamine storage -> weaker) phase of chi respiration.
But, if the yang phase is stronger with more bloodstream thiamine, then why not just induce a continuous yang phase and leave it that way? If oxygen is good, why not just breathe it in and hold it that way? Both aspects of the chi respiration cycle are as vital to a balanced state as inspiration and expiration of atmospheric oxygen. While it is sometimes beneficial to ameliorate some of the more severe cosmic yin phases, this should be done in a way that still accommodates both parts of the cycle. If it isn't, then ultimate chi depletion and loss of metabolic stamina may be the result. "Yang" is good, but "yin" is necessary!
Individuals who wear magnetic bracelets or head coverings continuously for increased strength or remission of symptoms (such as pain) may find that sooner, rather than later, the bracelet or cap becomes ineffective and their condition worsens. The temporary relief obtained by reducing the back-flow of thiamine from the bloodstream into the chi lines (i.e. by blocking the yin part of the chi respiration cycle) has resulted in the overall depletion of stored thiamine reserves available to sustain either the body's energy field or bloodstream requirements.
Overnight noise sequences (a form of passive Tai Chi) can be helpful in smoothing out cosmic chi pressure cycles with a bias towards increasing stored thiamine levels and a periodicity which is shorter than would be convenient for artificial chi respiration techniques used during the day.
• See "Overnight Noise For Insomnia" http://curezone.com/blogs/fm.asp?i=2003227
So now that you have a wide variety of choices of techniques that can push your body into a yang or yin phase of chi respiration, is there a crystal ball that will tell you when this activity will be most beneficial or is absolutely necessary to prevent you from sliding into chi depletion? Yes!
• See "Cosmic Chi Pressure Calendars" http://curezone.com/blogs/fm.asp?i=2020021
As onerous as unremitting cosmic chi pressure can be, once you are aware of its existence and its timing, you can surf the cosmic chi waves without being battered about by the turbulence…
[1] "To Chi Or Not To Chi" in "Astrophysiology… and Yeast", 2011.
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